Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities

Intergovernmental Relations Annual Transparency Report: 1 January - 31 December 2023

Baroness Swinburne: My Honourable friend the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Felicity Buchan MP), has today made the following written statement:Today, the Government published the third Annual Transparency Report of our engagement with the devolved administrations on GOV.UK. This Report has been laid as a Command Paper in both Houses. The Government has also published the fourth Quarterly Transparency Report Dashboard for 2023, also on GOV.UK.The Annual Report follows on from each of the Quarterly Dashboards published on GOV.UK throughout the year. The Annual Report shows that we are a Union which shares similar challenges. This Report covers a period where we have seen once in a generation events and gives an insight into the extensive engagement between the UK Government and the devolved administrations between 1 January to 31 December 2023. During this reporting period the administrations worked together on a number of areas, not least in organising the Coronation of Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla, the unlocking of two Green Freeports in Scotland and two Freeports in Wales, and the successful joint UK and Ireland bid to host the UEFA European Championships in 2028. The Report highlights that our collective strength is why we are able to face and tackle big changes and challenges.The Report is part of the Government’s ongoing commitment to transparency of intergovernmental relations to Parliament and the public. The Government will continue with such publications to demonstrate transparency in intergovernmental relations.

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Tenant Farming Update

Lord Douglas-Miller: My Right Honourable friend the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Steve Barclay) has made the following Statement.The tenant farming sector is a central part of our plan to back British farmers and grow the rural economy. This is now firmly embedded within government. Today we set out the progress we have made in delivering our commitments to the tenanted sector, one year on from the publication of the government response to the Rock Review of tenant farming. I am very pleased to report that we have active work underway to deliver or have completed on 64 of 75 of the commitments we made in our line-by-line response to the Rock Review. I have written to all Members of Parliament today with more details on the actions we have taken and highlight key progress below.Farm Tenancy ForumIn the summer of 2023, we established the joint government and industry Farm Tenancy Forum (the Forum) improving our engagement with the sector and supporting the implementation of our government response commitments. The Forum is having a very positive impact, ensuring that we consider the unique challenges facing the sector, facilitating more collaborative relationships between landlords and tenants, and helping to shape our farming policies and schemes so that they work for tenant farmers.Agricultural Landlord and Tenant Code of PracticeI can report that the Farm Tenancy Forum, supported by the government, published a new Agricultural Landlord and Tenant Code of Practice on 8 April 2024 Code of Practice. This important new Code delivers on a key recommendation of the Rock Review by setting out standards of responsible conduct for all parties to tenancy agreements. The Code will support landlords and tenants, and their professional advisers, to establish and maintain positive, productive, and sustainable commercial relationships, achieved through dialogue and a sense of fairness and proportionality. We extend thanks to all members of the Farm Tenancy Forum and the Expert Working Group for their collaborative work in developing the Code.We have also delivered a targeted industry Call for Evidence examining the potential benefits, impacts and role of a commissioner for the tenant farming sector to provide oversight of practices in the sector. We are considering next steps including the practical functions of this role, and a further update will follow.Improving access to our Environmental Land Management (ELM) SchemesWe have continued to make our environmental land management schemes accessible for tenants and expanded the number of actions that tenants can select. The positive changes we have made to the Sustainable Farming Initiative (SFI) scheme include:offering 3-year agreements to coincide with the average length of many tenancy agreements;ensuring that tenants who expect to have management control for 3 years can apply, meaning many farmers with annual rolling tenancy agreements can access SFI;removing penalties for tenants who may have to exit a scheme early if their tenancy ends unexpectedly;recommending communication and collaboration with landlords but not requiring the tenant to gain landlord consent to enter the scheme, provided there is no permanent land use change. However, the tenant should always check the terms of their tenancy agreements before entering SFI.When introduced, our expanded 2024 ELM offer will have many more actions with a 3-year duration further expanding our offer for the tenanted sector. We are also exploring the possibility of enabling collaborative joint tenant / landlord agreements in ELM. This could provide a beneficial additional route into some of our longer-term options schemes for some tenants and landlords where both parties want to work together.We have designed our agroforestry offer in a way that is responsive to the needs of tenants. We are testing a farm woodland standard through SFI including smaller-scale agroforestry which is more suitable to tenant farmers and in line with the recommendations from the Rock Review.Additionally, we are removing tax barriers to enable landlords and tenants to access longer term environmental schemes. We announced in our budget that from 6 April 2025 we will be extending the scope of Agricultural Property Relief to include land managed under an environmental agreement, this will open up the way for greater collaboration between tenants and landlords so that both parties can access the benefits.Recent and ongoing surveys indicate that a third of SFI applications are from wholly tenanted and mixed tenure farms. We are pleased with these indicators that demonstrate strong uptake of SFI by the tenanted sector. We will continue to monitor the uptake and impact of our ELM schemes in the tenanted sector and report findings to the Farm Tenancy Forum.Improving access to our capital grant schemesWe have also continued to improve accessibility to our capital grant offers supporting investment in farming equipment, technology, and infrastructure by reducing minimum grant rates and reviewing our intervention rates. We have allowed landlords to underwrite tenants’ applications if both parties wanted to pursue this option and continue to explore other options for collaborative landlord / tenant applications. We also no longer require tenants to have a tenancy agreement in place for 5 years to access our grants, merely commit to holding the asset for 5 years.Private markets and natural capitalOn March 12th we issued an update on progress under the Nature Markets Framework (March 2023), including the importance of ensuring that the tenanted sector can access opportunities that nature markets provide. The update recognised the role the Farm Tenancy Forum in developing further guidance on the management of ecosystem services on tenanted land and in showcasing best practice for approaching this within tenancy agreements. The Farm Tenancy Forum will develop this activity following the outcome of the British Standards Institution’s consultation on their Overarching Principles Standard (the first of a suite of nature investment standards sponsored by Defra) to ensure tenant sector specific guidance fits within these frameworks. This update demonstrates that one year on we have made good progress in delivering the commitments we made in response to the Rock Review. We will continue to put the needs and voices of the tenanted sector at the heart of our policies and schemes. This is a vital part of meeting our food security and environmental objectives.

Home Office

Productivity Within Policing

Lord Sharpe of Epsom: My rt hon Friend the Minister of State for Crime, Policing and Fire (Chris Philp) has today made the following Written Ministerial Statement:Today the government has published our response to the independent Policing Productivity Review. Improving productivity across the public sector is a priority for this Government. Increasing the productivity of policing means ensuring our police officers are able to do their jobs effectively and stripping away the unnecessary barriers they face. This will free up police time so that officers are able to concentrate on frontline work, protecting the public, detecting crime, and catching criminals. This will make the public safer and allow them to feel safe, increasing confidence in policing, another priority for this Government. In August 2022, the Home Office commissioned the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) to conduct an independent review of productivity in policing, providing clear, practical, and deliverable recommendations to improve efficiency and effectiveness across the functions of policing. The Review was published on 20 November 2023 and identified many opportunities for policing to improve productivity, with the potential to save 38 million hours of police officer time every year. That would be the equivalent of another 20,000 officers on our streets. Our response sets out the Government’s support for the Review and its recommendations. We have already announced investment of over £230m at the Spring Budget to drive productivity and performance improvements across policing. This will include additional investment into technology and innovation measures such as facial recognition, using drones as first responders, redaction, rapid video response, automated triage of 101 calls, knife detection, and robotic process automation. The Government will create a new Centre for Police Productivity, based in the College of Policing. This will be established from Autumn 2024 and set the foundations necessary for policing to deliver the 38 million police officer hours identified by the independent review. The Government is confident that policing will rise to the challenge of meeting the ambitions of the review’s recommendations. Our response outlines how we will support them in doing so. A copy of the response to the Policing Productivity Review will be placed in the Libraries of both Houses and is available at GOV.UK.